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Angel City signs ‘competitive winner’ Ally Sentnor to be a cornerstone of its future

Angel City signs ‘competitive winner’ Ally Sentnor to be a cornerstone of its futureU.S. women’s national team forward Ally Sentnor is officially headed to Angel City FC.

Two days after the club dismissed head coach Alex Straus, following a poor first half to the NWSL season, the club’s sporting director Mark Parsons says Sentnor’s transfer is another step in a long-term plan designed to transform the club into a perennial contender.

The 21-year-old joins the team from the Kansas City Current and is the latest major investment in Angel City’s roster rebuild, arriving at a moment when the club is simultaneously searching for stability and trying to accelerate its climb into championship contention. Angel City won only one of its last eight matches before the league’s summer break. The team has made the playoffs just once since 2022.

“This is a massive and very important moment for our club,” Parsons told The Athletic in an exclusive interview. “It’s not just about the goals, the assists and the quality of a footballer. She’s a competitive winner who wants to make the most out of every day.”

Both Sentnor and the team are getting accustomed to change. Angel City is Sentnor’s third team in as many seasons in the NWSL, while Angel City has yet to have a permanent head coach for a full two seasons.

However, the team isn’t presenting Sentnor as a reactionary move to Straus’ departure. According to Parsons, ACFC’s pursuit of the forward began months ago. While the initial conversations date back to spring, Kansas City Current was unwilling to entertain a move at the time. Discussions resumed several weeks ago, eventually resulting in one of the biggest transfers of the NWSL summer window so far. ACFC sent the Current $850,000 in intraleague transfer funds as part of the trade.

Sentnor’s move to the club comes less than a year after she was involved in another landmark transfer. Kansas City acquired the Massachusetts native from the Utah Royals for a then-record $600,000 guaranteed fee in August 2025, plus add-ons and a future sell-on clause.

The Current viewed her as a long-term piece alongside a young core that included fellow U.S. midfielder Claire Hutton. Both players helped the Current capture the NWSL Shield in 2025 and entered 2026 as one of the club’s key attacking players — and now both have departed the club, with Hutton having left for Bay FC in the off-season.

“Throughout my career, I’ve tried to approach every opportunity with more grit, more grace, and a commitment to doing more good, and I’m excited to bring that mindset to Angel City and the Los Angeles community,” Sentnor said in a statement.

Utah drafted Sentnor No.1 overall in 2024 after a successful stint at the University of North Carolina. Her rookie season showcased her attacking and game-building qualities, which resulted in her earning the 2024 U.S. Soccer Young Female Player of the Year award, attracting interest across the league.

For Parsons, Sentnor represents far more than another highly rated young player.

Parsons says the move is part of a broader strategy centered on building around elite young talent while supplementing it with championship-tested veterans such as Emily Sams, Ary Borges, Nealy Martin and Hina Sugita. The result is one of the league’s youngest rosters, but one Parsons believes is built for sustainable success rather than short-term gains.

“We are the youngest team in the league right now,” Parsons said. “We play more under-23s than any team in the league.”

However, those players are now without a permanent head coach as of Wednesday. In the absence of Straus, senior assistant coach Leif Gunnar Smerud will act as interim head coach, and the team will embark on another comprehensive search for a replacement. Parsons declined to discuss the reasons behind the decision in detail, saying it was too soon after the announcement.

“I hope in the next week or two that I can be really clear,” he said. “Like I always have and always will, being really clear and really open on everything that we’re doing. But today is not that day.”

ACFC has undergone sweeping changes since Parsons arrived as sporting director ahead of the 2025 season, overseeing a major rebuild of both the roster and the club’s sporting infrastructure. Angel City revamped its medical, scouting, analytics and technical departments while reshaping the squad around a younger core. That core was previously anchored by 21-year-old U.S. forward Alyssa Thompson, who transferred to Chelsea last year.

The results have been mixed. Across the 2025 and 2026 regular seasons, Angel City compiled a 10-14-11 record. The club finished the 2025 campaign with 25 points, outside the playoff positions and in the bottom half of the NWSL standings. Optimism grew early in 2026 after they opened the season with three consecutive victories, a run that earned head coach Alexander Straus the league’s Coach of the Month award for March.

But the momentum stagnated. By the time Straus was dismissed on June 17, the club sat 12th in the 16-team NWSL standings.

Bringing in Sentnor not only contributes to the ongoing vision of the club’s youth movement, but it also aligns with what Parsons frequently describes as Angel City’s “football DNA.” Parsons was clear about where they wanted her to be.

“We were really clear with Ally: you have to be close to the goal,” he said. Whether that means as a No. 10, a false nine or another attacking role remains to be seen. “She strikes the ball with both feet better than anyone I’ve seen in the country. It’s going to be pretty fun seeing her do that for Angel City.”

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

US Women's national team, Kansas City Current, Angel City, NWSL, Women's Soccer

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